youngflyer
Well-Known Member
Is it smarter to get your written tests done before training or waiting until you are midway through your training? I would think that it is smarter to get it before training.
have you even started flying yet? If you can do your written tests before training your a pretty dang smart learner on your own. www.sportys.com is a GREAT site for Private, and Instrument practice tests, and study guide. For Commercial it sucks. If I were you i'd start flying first. When you go thru your training manual, start actually flying, things on your written practice tests come A LOT easier because you have real-world experience to back up your proof.Is it smarter to get your written tests done before training or waiting until you are midway through your training? I would think that it is smarter to get it before training.
Agreed. Thats what I used for my Commercial test. That and the PTS guide.It is a really smart idea, you will save money & time. The above post is right that things come together easier when you have some flight time first but really you will save money if you get it out of the way first. I would suggest dauntless ($20-30/per test) to study for the written http://www.dauntless-soft.com/PRODUCTS/GroundSchool/
FOI, ha!! Don't need anything other than the Gleim book for that one. There's only like 200 questions in the test bank. I bought the book and took the test 4 hours later. 100%. By far the easiest of all the writtens I've taken. For the rest of though I would recommend some sort of computer based practice tests. For private I think Sportys even has study sessions you can use to study the questions, and then take as many practice tests as you want. Its all free.FOI = I assume he means the written test fundamentals of instruction.
Certified Flight Instructor - Airplaneand WTF is CFI A ?
Is it smarter to get your written tests done before training or waiting until you are midway through your training? I would think that it is smarter to get it before training.
A lot of people think it is smart to 'get it out of the way' first, and I understand the thinking, which is wrong, but I understand it.The above post is right that things come together easier when you have some flight time first but really you will save money if you get it out of the way first.
A lot of people think it is smart to 'get it out of the way' first, and I understand the thinking, which is wrong, but I understand it.
I don't get how you think it will save you money. It costs the same whenever you do it...??
But...to the meat of it. You said that "things will come easier" when you have some flight time first. And that is important. Probably more important than is generally recognized. The industry tends to put money and convienence ahead of good training philosophy.
In the Instructor's Handbook, you will learn that the study of theory and practical should go hand-in-hand. Read/study a little, then put it into practice.
Trying to read/study a whole system of theory that requires practical experience to fully comprehend will, I repeat, will, cause some level of mis-understanding. When the mind has no experience in the practical, it 'makes up' a visualization of the practical experience, which may have some level of incorrectness, which has to be 'found', and corrected by the instructor when you later begin to try to put the theory to practice.
Ground school along with and coorelated to flight training has always been the best way to learn how to do this stuff. You learn mis-conceptions when you put all the ground training up front.
:yeahthat:A lot of people think it is smart to 'get it out of the way' first, and I understand the thinking, which is wrong, but I understand it.
I don't get how you think it will save you money. It costs the same whenever you do it...??
But...to the meat of it. You said that "things will come easier" when you have some flight time first. And that is important. Probably more important than is generally recognized. The industry tends to put money and convienence ahead of good training philosophy.
In the Instructor's Handbook, you will learn that the study of theory and practical should go hand-in-hand. Read/study a little, then put it into practice.
Trying to read/study a whole system of theory that requires practical experience to fully comprehend will, I repeat, will, cause some level of mis-understanding. When the mind has no experience in the practical, it 'makes up' a visualization of the practical experience, which may have some level of incorrectness, which has to be 'found', and corrected by the instructor when you later begin to try to put the theory to practice.
Ground school along with and coorelated to flight training has always been the best way to learn how to do this stuff. You learn mis-conceptions when you put all the ground training up front.
The miltary does not do ground school first. There are no airline schools, as such, that I know of.why would the airlines and military do the writtens and ground school FIRST? These are organizations that have spent a LOT of time and money to research the most efficient way to teach people. Just because the civilian world tends not to do this (flight schools are in business to make MONEY on the training, not SAVE it!), does not mean that is the best or correct.
Every airline has a ground school that new hires and upgrades must attend. It lasts several weeks, and is completed in its entirety before sim training begins.There are no airline schools, as such, that I know of.